Item details
Item ID
CCLD05-04
Title Tawra Flakam clan. Origin of the Flakam clan
Description Sri Goki Flakam, 52 years old, a resident of Taflap mla, Chhaglagam Circle, Anjaw District. He narrates the story of Flakam clan. According to him, the origin of Flakam is Kadam kara. Kadam Kara means the clans of Kadam kara are the native of the place at Chhaglagam. They did not migrated from anywhere. The clan existed during the creation of the sun and the Brahmaputra. The Kadam kara group are the Flakam, The Taphlap and the Taponyu clan etc. The people of Flakam community can be found in Anjaw Dist of Chhaglagam though some of them migrated to Lohit.
Origination date 2022-12-11
Origination date free form
Archive link https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/CCLD05/04
URL
Collector
Johakso Manyu
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Language as given
Subject language(s)
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Dialect
Region / village Tezu, Lohit district, Arunachal Pradesh, India

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Originating university University of Sydney
Operator Nick Ward
Data Categories
Data Types
Discourse type
Roles Johakso Manyu : speaker
Gokhi Flakam : speaker
DOI 10.26278/99cn-4d14
Cite as Johakso Manyu (collector), Johakso Manyu (speaker), Gokhi Flakam (speaker), 2022. Tawra Flakam clan. Origin of the Flakam clan. EAF+XML/MATROSKA/MP4/X-SUBRIP/JPEG/TIFF/PLAIN. CCLD05-04 at catalog.paradisec.org.au. https://dx.doi.org/10.26278/99cn-4d14
Content Files (8)
Filename Type File size Duration File access
CCLD05-04-01.eaf application/eaf+xml 12 KB
CCLD05-04-01.mkv video/matroska 1.73 GB 00:02:29.215
CCLD05-04-01.mp4 video/mp4 191 MB 00:02:29.216
CCLD05-04-freeTranslation.srt application/x-subrip 1.96 KB
CCLD05-04-Gokhi_Flakam.jpg image/jpeg 4.28 MB
CCLD05-04-Gokhi_Flakam.tif image/tiff 32.5 MB
CCLD05-04-Gokhi_Flakam.txt text/plain 570 Bytes
CCLD05-04-transcription.srt application/x-subrip 2.2 KB
8 files -- 1.95 GB -- --

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Collection Information
Collection ID CCLD05
Collection title Oral histories of Tawrã clan group origins and migrations
Description About the language

Tawrã (/ta-wrã/, also sometimes spelled as Taraon, in India, or Dáràng, in China), is a Trans-Himalayan language spoken on both sides of the northeast border area of India and Tibet (presently China). Another name sometimes used for Tawrã as spoken in India is Digaru or Digaro, which is based on the name of a prominent river in the Tawrã-speaking area and is the source of the Glottocode diga1241. However, this is an exonym and Tawrã speakers themselves refer to their language as Tawrã. Ethnically, Tawrã speakers form part of the broader ethnic group known as Mishmi, which also includes Kera’a (Idu Mishmi) and K(a)man (Miju Mishmi). In India, from which this collection originates, Tawrã is primarily spoken in the Lohit district of Arunachal Pradesh, around the localities of Teju, Sunpura and Wakro, and in the Anjaw district including Chaglagam, Goiliang and Hayuliang circles. At present, there appear to be about 15,000-20,000 speakers of Tawrã in Arunachal Pradesh.

About the collection

This project was conducted by Johakso Manyu, a Tawrã community member, and funded by a 2022 FLICR Fellowship awarded to him by the Centre for Cultural-Linguistic Diversity - Eastern Himalaya (Co-Directors Mark W. Post and Yankee Modi, Associate Directors Kellen Parker Van Dam and Zilpha Modi, https://ccld-eh.org). Financial support for the 2022 FLICR Fellowship program was provided by the Firebird Foundation for Anthropological Research, through a grant administered by the University of Sydney. The project was mentored by Yankee Modi, and also involved close collaboration with Rolf Hotz in the context of his University of Sydney PhD project "A Grammar of Tawrã".

This collection includes nearly two hours of audio/video files in Tawrã language, with time-aligned English translations, as well as photographs and names of consultants. The primary aim was to collect oral histories of Tawrã clan origins and migrations. It was motivated by the observation that migration histories are not homogeneous across the Tawrã-speaking community; instead, different Tawrã clans have their own clan-specific migration stories that detail how they came to be settled in their present village. Rather than trying to resolve them to a single consistent narrative, this collection represents all of these different perspectives in an attempt to represent the full richness of Tawrã cultural memories. This project also contributes to efforts to determine the geographical and clan-wise distribution of different varieties of the Tawrã language. All files in this collection are open-access, and may be used freely with acknowledgement.

About the collector

Johakso Manyu is a Tawrã community member and native speaker, who is currently working as an advocate in the town of Teju. He has worked for many years on topics related to Tawrã language and culture, and has also partnered with international linguists such as Jonathan Evans, with whom he has co-authored a description of Tawrã phonology, and Rolf Hotz, with whom he has worked on grammatical analysis of Tawrã. Johakso Manyu attended a number of TRICL workshops, and was selected for the FLICR Fellowship that forms the basis of this collection in 2022.
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Access Information
Edit access Nick Ward
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Data access conditions Open (subject to agreeing to PDSC access conditions)
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